Killings
and attacks have become a regular feature in Burundi as a political crisis
grips the country ©Onesphore Nibigira (AFP)
|
An African Union human
rights report called on Friday for an international police force and more
military and rights observers to be sent to troubled Burundi.
AFP
report continues:
The
AU rights investigators said it was "necessary that, apart from
strengthening AU human rights monitors and military observers, an international
police mission is deployed."
Last
year the AU proposed a 5,000-strong peacekeeping force but the pan-African bloc
buckled in the face of opposition from Bujumbura.
Hundreds
have been killed and a quarter of a million people have left Burundi since
President Pierre Nkurunziza's controversial decision in April 2015 to run for a
third term, a vote he won in July.
Anti-government
protests were brutally quashed and killings and attacks have become a regular
feature in the troubled country as the political crisis grinds on.
The
AU said the police would help boost security and ensure "protection of
people in those areas most affected by violence and which continue to witness
it."
The
report, from the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights, was presented
to the AU earlier this month but only released publicly on Friday.
The
AU investigators also called for the "reopening of the various independent
radio stations that were arbitrarily closed down" and to "reverse the
collective closure of the 10 civil society organisations that play a key role
in the promotion and protection of human rights."
The
report was based on a week-long mission in December 2015, during which time the
investigators' movement was limited due to "an eruption of major
fighting" in the capital.
"The
major consequence of these limitations is that the delegation could not
establish the exact identity of the perpetrators of the human rights
violations," it admitted.
Many
of the abuses detailed in the 58-page report were therefore based on existing
media and rights reports.
A
team from the office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights began a
four-month investigation earlier this month.
The
probe comes five months after the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva called for
a team to be "urgently" sent there as concerns grow that Burundi
risks descending once again into civil war.
Long-stalled peace talks aimed at solving the year-long crisis are due to begin in Tanzania on Saturday, but the main opposition group has not been invited, demolishing hopes of a deal.
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